Excellent conditioner for a light rinse out. I like the Apple and Ocean Breeze the best with regard to the natural's product line. They are both light and effective. I hate the Tropical Coconut as it does contain protein which my fine hair cannot tolerate. The consistency of the natural's line conditioners are all different. These two are not heavy and waxy.

Suave Green Apple ConditionerI have healthy, shoulder length, color processed straight hair and an oily scalp. I�ve been using this for 2 years now. What I love most about this conditioner is that it is not heavy and doesn�t make my hair full of static. I hate static and flyaway hair.

This conditioner is for hair that needs just enough conditioning to get rid of tangles and make hair smooth. If you need more aggressive conditioning and moisture, give this a pass and use something else.

The scent is much better than the Coconut version. I was getting more and more nauseated by the sweet coconut smell, hence the switch to the Green Apple which has a much fresher pleasant scent.

Pros:Light conditioningPleasant scentLittle to no buildup - no longer the case, see updateNo heavy siliconesRinses easily - no longer the case, see updateComplements any shampooDoesn�t leave hair static and flyaway Good priceAvailability at drugstores and supermarkets

Cons:Not for those who need more aggressive conditioning and moistureThin consistencyDoesn�t add much body but it does not advertise itself as bodybuilding

Update: I previously gave this 5 lippies but I'm taking off 2. Sometime last year in 2014, the formula was changed to 2x more conditioning. I have to add more cons:Doesn't rinse out cleanLeaves a gummy film on my hairBuilds up over timeMakes my hair too soft and unmanageable. My straight hair starts to curl and form waves.

For these reasons, I'm taking off two lippies. I would prefer to give it one lippie since I can't use it anymore but that wouldn't be fair. The new formula might work for the people who say the previous version was too watery.

Great news. I found the perfect substitute. White Rain Moisturizing Conditioner in Apple Blossom with Active Botanicals!. It has all the positive attributes of the previous version of Suave Green Apple Conditioner. And it costs $1.09 for 15 oz at the supermarket! One caveat, it has a thin consistency. But It leaves my hair light and conditioned and manageable. I plan to write a separate review for this conditioner.

I like this conditioner! I love how Suave makes shampoos and conditioners in pretty much every scent imaginable. This one really does smell like a green apple. It's really crisp and refreshing. Plus the conditioner itself works really well. I put it on my clean, wet hair and comb it through before I rinse it. Without using too much product, it detangles my hair quite well. It also leaves my hair soft and manageable. I would repurchase and I do recommend.

Although this product smelled good, it did nothing for moisturizing, & my hair was still pretty knotted after using this. Someone gave this to me, so I'm not actually out anything, but I would not repurchase.

love love love love! i mean it smells amazing, makes my hair look gorgeous and shiny and clean. It smells amaazing! it also brings out the brown in my hair and the natural hilights from the sun. It's amazingll i love everything about it

I used this conditioner as a shave cream so I can't comment on it's hair conditioning performance. As a shaving cream, I thought it smelled lovely, worked well & my only concern are the ingredients. I'm trying to switch over to safer products & avoid ingredients such as "fragrance" that can consist of up to 100+ unknown chemical substances.

Make no mistake. The lovely scent of this conditioner comes from anything BUT the natural smell of juicy green apples but more so from a cocktail of chemicals combined to create the illusion. Apple extract is #15 of 18 ingredients so 1) there's nothing "natural" about this conditioner & 2) it contains a very minute amount of apple anything. False advertising all the way but given the price & the brand, I'm not surprised. Personally though, I like to find the ingredients boasted in the advertising included in the first 5. Rarely the case with most commercial products.